HomeMy WebLinkAboutCLD-004-14 Clarington REPORT
CLERK'S DEPARTMENT
Meeting: GENERAL PURPOSE AND ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE
Date: January 20, 2014 Resolution#: - 4 -111 By-law#:
Report#: CLD-004-14 File#:
Subject: MUNICIPAL LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICE LEVELS
RECOMMENDATIONS:
It is respectfully recommended that the General Purpose and Administration Committee
recommend to Council the following:
1. THAT Report CLD-004-14 be received for information.
Submitted by: Reviewed by: � r
P ' ' le, CO Franklin Wu,
Municipal Clerk Chief Administrative Officer
PLB/Ic
CORPORATION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF CLARINGTON
40 TEMPERANCE STREET, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO L1C 3A6 T 905-623-3379
REPORT NO.: CLD-004-14 PAGE 2
1. BACKGROUND
On October 7, 2013 the General Purpose and Administration Committee passed
Resolution GPA-489-13, which stated:
"THAT the Municipal Clerk's Department provide a report on By-law Enforcement
including parking enforcement with information on overtime costs, potential for
hiring additional staff or contracting out, and detailing areas of major concern
including the number of open cases, number of calls, and subject matter."
Generally speaking, Municipal Law Enforcement is reactive, responding to calls for
service from the community. Much of their activity is based on the principle of
maintaining or improving the prevailing community standards and tolerances for various
activities while Parking handles a mix of reactive and proactive issues.
The Division is composed of seven officers, a clerk and the Manager. Of the seven
officers, four are Municipal Law Enforcement Officers (MLEOs), two are full time
Parking Enforcement Officers (PEOs), one is a part time Parking Enforcement Officer.
The clerk provides clerical support to the Division. The Manager oversees the
operations of the Division.
Currently there is no on-site supervisor for either the MLEOs or the PEOs during
evening, night or weekend hours. The Division Manager can be contacted by phone in
an emergency. After hours dispatch is done through a patch directly to the MLEO's cell
phone. This method of dispatch will be reviewed as part of the 2014 Communication
Strategy Initiative.
The Municipal Law Enforcement Division, as a whole, is part of the Inside Collective
Agreement and the Division has traditionally operated Monday to Friday from 8:30 am
to 4:30 pm during the fall winter and spring months and 8:00 am to 4:00 pm in the
summer months. In late 2012 Council authorized the expansion of this level of service
and increased the number of MLEOs.
In accordance with the limits of the Inside Collective Agreement the Division expanded
and added a new MLEO in January 2013. The officer was hired with the intent that they
would work an afternoon shift from noon to 8:00 pm from Tuesday to Friday and
8:30 am to 4:30 pm on Saturdays. Schedule B of the Inside Collective Agreement
stipulates that "scheduled overtime will be offered and distributed equitably to
employees who normally perform the work." This officer, therefore would respond to
calls and investigate matters as they relate to general by-law issues rather than ongoing
parking issues during the evenings and weekends. Ongoing or regularly occurring
parking issues cannot be handled by the MLEO on duty over the weekend and must be
handled by a PEO. If there is a one-time specific parking problem, the MLEO does
investigate and take action.
REPORT NO.: CLD-004-14 PAGE 3
2. CURRENT DEMANDS FOR SERVICE
Over the last 6 years the Division has had an annual average of 1,982 calls for service
representing, among other things, 476 property calls, 408 parking calls and 364 zoning
calls. Each call can represent anything from one hour to several days to resolve.
Where the call involves matters that come before a court or hearing of some form, that
time can extend into several weeks, months or in a few cases, years.
At present, staff are dealing with 295 open general enforcement files and 66 parking
files. This translates into 57 open files per MLEO and 22 parking files per PEO. Of the
files currently under investigation the top 4 categories are: Property Standards and
maintenance issues (80), Zoning (64), site alteration (33), and noise (20).
With a physical area of more than 610 square kilometres, travel time to and from
complaints can consume a considerable amount of time; however enforcement is not
just time out on the road inspecting and investigating. It also involves periods in the
office collecting information and interviewing parties over the phone and in person.
Daily routine requires the officers to spend approximately 30% of their time in the office
addressing these issues as well as processing emails, phone and counter enquiries.
At least twice each month two of the Parking Officers begin work at 2:30 am. and
enforce the overnight prohibition from 3:00 am to 5:00 am. They then continue on
working until 2:30 pm. By that time they have worked a total of 12 hours and reached
the maximum time that can work in a given day. They have also accumulated 6 hours
of overtime for that day. This can be taken in pay or accumulated Time-in-Lieu. In
2013, the PEOs accumulated 153 hours of overtime as a result of the overnight
enforcement (maximum of 21.8 days off or $6,784.02 payout).
3. OPERATIONAL OBSERVATIONS
Council had directed that a new MLEO be added in 2012 in order to better respond to
the needs of the public. The conditions and limitations in the Collective Agreement
mean that the MLEO cannot do work that would take overtime away from other union
staff, in particular the PEOs. Initially this was not perceived to be a problem.
The ability of the officers to conduct routine enforcement is severely restricted by the
time of day and available light. Nighttime renders it near impossible to conduct
adequate exterior inspections. Added to this are the possible mistakes in identity and
the public perceiving an officer conducting a nighttime property inspection for a thief or
burglar and it poses a potential safety risk to have the officers conducting any form of
property inspection. This leaves the enforcement of licencing for taxis and noise issues,
many of which may require police assistance and of course parking issues which have
occurred over the course of the evening.
In the months since the commencement of the new extended MLEO hours 4:30 pm to
8:30 pm, staff have noticed a disconnect between the MLEO position and the actual
needs of the public. The general impression is that since its inception earlier last year,
staff have received fewer than a half dozen actual calls for service that were within the
REPORT NO.: CLD-004-14 PAGE 4
scope of the MLEO officer. The vast majority of the calls received were for Parking
matters.
In order to determine the accuracy of this anecdotal perception, in October 2013, staff
began to track incoming calls for service received by the MLEO between 4:30 pm and
8:00 pm. A total of 22 calls for service with only 2 non-parking related issues (concerns
over snow clearing bills) were received. The remaining 20 have all been issues which
would be the responsibility of the PEOs.
4. COMPARISONS ACROSS THE AREA
Staff have looked at the practices of various municipalities across the province but
concentrated on common approaches, if any, within Durham Region and the
surrounding area.
MUNICIPALITY AFTERNOON NIGHTS WEEKEND DURATION DISPATCH DUTIES
Winter Night shift, Own dispatch
4 pm to only Noise
OSHAWA midnight noon to winter only service plus enforcement,
2 Officers g pm Afternoon, all some help from parking
2 MLEO year DRPS
No dispatch,
WHITBY Private Private Year round cell phones to Parking only
security security their office only
Call out is at
2 officers the discretion
12:30 pm to Week days of the Manager Only serious
AJAX 8:30 pm. only, issues of health
Monday to until 8:30 pm. All calls are and safety.
Friday screened by
him.
1 MLEO
Parking Saturday
1 MLEO until 8 at least 1 Until 8 pm,
pm. 1 PEO Year-Round Dispatch Parking and
PICKERING 1 PEO until 10 overnight Saturday service general by-law
pm Sunday and
to Friday Sunday
overnight
Until 6 Every other Until 6am. Self
PETERBOROUGH Yes am weekend during winter dispatched and Parking issues
Private Private months through police
security Security
Police and Overnight
COBOURG security Police Police during winter Through police Parking only
months
Saturday
BELLEVILLE Police Police and Year Round Cell phone General by-law
Sunday 9 and parking
amto4 pm
Saturday
QUINTE WEST Police Police Sunday 9 Year Round Police dispatch Parking, noise
amto4 pm
REPORT NO.: CLD-004-14 PAGE 5
The survey of the nearby municipalities reveals that no other municipality in the area
offers 24/7 full enforcement. The real need across the Region appears to be for Parking
Enforcement beyond the traditional hours of 8:30 am to 4:30 pm.
5. CONTRACTING OUT
At present, all full time inside and outside workers are part of CUPE Local 74. The
current Collective Agreement speaks to the subject of contracting out in section 28,
"The Municipality will contract out for the provision of security related services."
Contracting out MLEO or PEO services to provide expanded service would require
entering into discussions with CUPE to come to an agreement in protocol. Article 17.3
of the CUPE Collective Agreement states; "No employee in the employ of the
Municipality shall be laid off as the result of contracting, leasing, assigning or conveying
work to another person or employer."
The municipality does allow private property owners to contract out on their own to have
a person or persons enforcing the private property provisions using municipal parking
tickets. This is at no cost to the Municipality and operates outside of our direct
influence.
Outsourcing to replace current staff would not result in instant savings. Existing staff
would have to be either grandfathered, as happened when the 4t" MLEO was hired, or
provided with another position at the same salary level.
The Town of Whitby uses private security to provide parking services during afternoon
and evening hours. Their annual budget for 2013 was approximately $25,000. This
amount provided a maximum of 20 hours per week evening and overnight. This cost
does not include any additional office space, necessary equipment for the job, or any
ancillary costs for equipment which would have to be arranged with the supplier. At
present Clarington's part-time PEO earns $26,660 for the same number of hours.
While contracting out the service may have initial economic benefits there are other
serious considerations which staff would have to address. In the end the potential risk
to the integrity of our records and our ability to properly respond to complaints may be
compromised.
6. ENFORCEMENT OPTIONS
The following details various options for expanding service levels. These figures show
what is needed to cover the existing level of Municipal Law coverage or to extend
Parking Enforcement to match that level. There are several options for creating an
extended hour work schedule. The 2013 budget for the Division was $635,335.00 with
staffing related costs of $530,893.
REPORT NO.: CLD-004-14 PAGE 6
6.1 FULL COVERAGE 24 HOURS PER DAY 7 DAYS PER WEEK
This program would involve the creation of full day and night enforcement 7 days per
week. This is not a short term approach as it requires a complete rethinking of the
duties and obligations of the Division along with a renegotiation of the Collective
Agreement and the creation of 4 squads working 12 hour shifts from 7 am to 7 pm and 7
pmto7am.
In order to offer a consistent level of service regardless of the Squad working, there
would need to be 3 MLEOs, 3 PEOs and a shift supervisor per squad. These officers
would replicate the level of service currently provided. Day shift would also have the
Manager. Total Division manpower would increase to 1 Manager, 4 Supervisors, 12
MLEOs and 12 PEOs. Total annual operating budget for the Division would rise to
approximately $3,331,600.00.
This approach to staffing is most often seen in municipalities which host large colleges
or universities. The calls for service are of such volume that they cannot be handled
adequately by a day shift alone and the local police often require the assistance of a
dedicated municipal enforcement unit. Clarington does not currently have the
necessary volume of calls to justify this approach.
6.2 EXPANSION OF CURRENT LEVEL OF SERVICE
This option envisions having a night shift that operates in conjunction with the existing
scheduled afternoon shift. A night shift could be created to run from 8:00 pm until 4:00
am. This approach would require the hiring of one new MLEO for the night shift, two
PEOs (one afternoon and one night) and a Shift Supervisor. Additional cost to the
budget would be $329,960.00.
Some savings can be realized in this process because there would be no need for each
night shift officer to have their own vehicle. Where possible, equipment such as
vehicles, computers and ticketing printers can be shared. The anticipated annual
budget for the Division would rise to approximately $965,300.00.
This approach also requires more staff and expands to a level of service that is in
excess of the current demands for service. Staff review of 2012 and 2013 statistics
indicate that this is not a necessary increase. The approach also carries the same
challenges of nighttime enforcement as full 24/7 deployment would have for the MLEOs.
6.3 INCREASED PRESENCE AT CURRENT HOURS
The option envisages the extension of the hours of operation for Parking Enforcement
to match those of the MLEO until 8:00 pm, or later. This allows for two officers to be
working, thus increasing the margin of safety for the officers themselves while at the
same time responding to the public's demands for service.
REPORT NO.: CLD-004-14 PAGE 7
This option would require the hiring of a third full-time Parking Officer for the afternoon
shift while at the same time retaining the part-time PEO to monitor and enforce the
downtown areas of Bowmanviile, Newcastle and Orono. The Division's annual
operating budget would rise from $635,335.00 to approximately $702,360.00. This
estimate includes training requirements, equipment, uniforms and the shift premium of
$6.00 per day.
This option provides for the most appropriate, timely and efficient approach to meeting
the needs of the community.
7.0 CONCLUSION
Given the concerns highlighted above regarding access to property during hours of
darkness, consideration will be given to moving the current afternoon shift MLEO to the
day shift for the late fall, winter and early spring. The officer's effectiveness and ability
to respond to her other duties will not be hindered. As stated previously, the
demonstrated need is for an increased Parking Enforcement presence, which could be
accommodated by the addition of a third full-time PEO.
Unlike the MLEOs duties, PEO investigations can be successfully conducted after dark,
as the 3 am to 5 am enforcement has demonstrated.
This approach could be easily accommodated within the provisions of the current
Collective Agreement while, at the same time, providing a more timely response to
demands for service.
The foregoing is presented for Council's information.
8.0 CONCURRENCE: Not Applicable
CONFORMITY WITH STRATEGIC PLAN — Not Applicable
Staff Contact: Len Creamer, Manager, Municipal Law Enforcement